Showing posts with label Missouri. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Missouri. Show all posts

2,880 sqft Stunning, Luxurious and Energy-Efficient Shipping Container Home, St. Louis, Missouri





Plans
Video
Location

ProjectThe Container House
Containers9
Area2,880 sqft
Bedrooms3
Year2018
Price$435,000
LocationSt. Louis, Missouri




A stunning, luxurious and energy-efficient shipping container home, located on a premier corner lot in the heart of Old North St. Louis! Within sight of Downtown and convenient to the new NGA campus, this home delivers luxury and livability. Known locally as 'The Container House', this 3-story home built from 9 former shipping containers boasts dramatic open spaces and innovative details. The main floor features a sought-after open plan for easy entertaining! Upstairs, the primary suite is an airy retreat, featuring walk-in closets, a large dressing area, a spa-like shower w/skylight and a private covered deck with an Arch view! The top floor hosts two more BRs and lots and lots of flexible space - art gallery. As if all that weren't enough, the expansive yard is a beautifully curated garden of native species, complete with a serene walking path. Signature murals on both sides provide the finishing touches to this urban oasis!

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Net-Zero Prefab Shipping Container Home by Missouri S&T





Net-Zero Prefab Home
Construction
Video
About Missouri S&T Solar House Design Team





Design: Missouri University of Science and Technology
Project: The Nest Home
Year: 2015
Photos: Mike Chino

Three shipping containers were used by Missouri University of Science and Technology students for construction net-zero prefab shipping container homes that have reasonable prices and they are safe. A bird’s nest became an inspiration for choosing the shape of the Nest Home, for building of which recycled materials were used. There are also several sustainable systems, such as efficient lighting, a hydroponic garden and grey water reuse. Solar panels provide the house with enough energy for all needed aims and an electric vehicle. During Solar Decathlon 2015 international competition this project was created. Solar Decathlon challenges student teams to design, build, and operate the most attractive, effective, and energy-efficient solar-powered house.

The Nest Home was constructed for a growing family. The net-zero prefab shipping container home includes private and common spaces, but the living space can be enlarged with the help of containers that can be added to the Nest Home. There are reused materials, from which made everything in house. For example, the wood siding is made from refurbished shipping pallets, the carpeting is made from reused fishing nets and insulation is made from recycled denim batting.

For powering the house and an electric vehicle there are 24 photovoltaic panels. Each panel contains a micro-inverter for transforming direct current to alternating current, and a centralized inverter is not required. The optimal temperature in the house maintains by automated windows that support the HVAC system. There are also automated lightning for saving energy and sensors for detecting the empty house. Three hydroponic gardens provide the owners with fresh vegetables and herbs. The greywater reclamation helps to provide irrigation for the bathroom and the gardens. So, the water consumption of the net-zero prefab container home is reduced up to 25 percent.





“Everything from the architecture of the home, to the expandability of the home, to the systems in place are designed and implemented to provide comfort and convenience for the residents,” says Mary Puleo, the team’s project manager and an environmental engineering senior from St. Louis. “However, its adaptable nature makes it ideal for any stage of family life, from a full nest to an empty nest.”

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$150,000 Shipping Container House, Springfield, Missouri







About architects

DesignJason Mitchell and Michael Mardis
Total Cost$150,000
Containers4
LocationSpringfield, Missouri
Year2010
PhotographyJess Heugel



With a budget of $150,000, Marti Montgomery used four shipping containers to build a home on the land she's dreamed of living on for decades.

2000 sq ft Shipping Container House, Kansas City, Missouri







Video
Location
About BNIM
About Home Contained




ProjectGlassberg Container House
Design and buildBNIM and Home Contained (Debbie Glassberg)
Containers5
Bedrooms3
Bathrooms3
Area2000 sq ft
Year2008
LocationKansas City, Missouri

While homes made of containers is not a new idea, this ocean shipping container house design is unique in how it combine spaces and areas that nurture the inhabitants. Delightful to be in and easy to maintain, these spaces are inspiring and generous. The designer created three kinds of spaces: Container Space offers unique livable areas, Contained Space – the area created between two or more containers and Uncontained Space – which is the area beyond the building, integrally connected to an overall structure.

Description from builders

BNIM collaborated with Debbie Glassberg to design her new residence constructed from five shipping containers in the Brookside neighborhood of Kansas City, Missouri. The containers, pieced together with a steel and concrete framework, create space for two bedrooms, an office, television room, kitchen, dining area, living room and three bathrooms. The pre-fabricated containers are taller than typical shipping containers, allowing for large windows that create an open and light-filled space. The roof of the two-story residence includes an edible garden and patio.